
The Bad Seeds and Zakary Thaks were mid ‘60s Texas Garage Rock bands formed in the wake of the British Invasion, influenced by The Rolling Stones, Kinks, Yardbirds and others, becoming top local live attractions at a time when the 13th Floor Elevators and Moving Sidewalks were leading the way into Psychedelia. In late 1966 Rod Prince on guitar and Roy Cox on bass from Bad Seeds joined up with David Fore from Zakary Thaks on drums to create a new band out of San Antonio featuring two lead guitarists. Todd Potter filled out the quartet on second guitar and they chose the name Bubble Puppy, taken from Aldous Huxley’s 1932 dystopian novel Brave New World. Huxley was an early advocate of LSD, appropriately. In 1969 Bubble Puppy scored a top 20 hit single with “Hot Smoke & Sasafrass” which led to their LP “A Gathering Of Promises.” International Artists, the legendary Texas label that previously had unleashed mind expanding classics by the Elevators, Red Crayola, Golden Dawn and others was a perfect fit. After the LP and additional 45s didn’t repeat the success of “Hot Smoke & Sasafrass” the band hooked up with Nick St. Nicholas of Steppenwolf as their new manager and moved to Los Angeles.
A new band name was in order, Nick St. Nicholas chose Demian, title of the 1919 novel by Herman Hesse. His books were popular with the counterculture at the time and had provided Steppenwolf with their new name after they changed it from the Sparrow and hit it big. Demian recorded the LP live in the studio at the Record Plant in one midnight to six session. They had their arrangements fully realized, allowing them to combine live show energy and economy with to-the-point delivery suitable for repeated listening. No doubt they were aiming for Pop hit success, using proto-Hard Rock skills in a radio friendly way without compromising the Heavy guitar moves. The vocals have echoes of the earlier Bubble Puppy style in spots but are more melodic with vibrant harmonies reminiscent of Moby Grape, Buffalo Springfield, James Gang… at times flashing on Steve Stills/Richie Furay Westcoast without being too sweet about it. It works terrifically when the radio friendly voices top off killer hard guitar ensemble action. Early Hard Rock that is too bluesy flashy can get tiresome with repeat listening, especially if overdosing on guitar solos with the band relegated to the background… Demian keep it interesting with inventive song structures allowing all four players to integrate constantly into an ever changing but focused whole. This LP is a grower, despite the basic two guitars, bass and drums lineup and no frills production you reach a lot of different places during the ride. Demian is deadly Hard Rock, a perfectly organized vibe straddling live energy and crafted itinerary, amongst the first obscure major label killers that commanded premium $$ with collectors even way back in the late ‘70s. It gets you there every time, even half a century later!
“Coming” is the storm after the calm, closing out side one in a savage manner. It enters with a brief fake prog intro and slides into a tuff stalker rhythm groove with lyrics about Mother Nature falling down, nailed to the wall with ominous biting power moves. The only escape is running away with the right woman. The extended break here incorporates snarling lead guitar trade offs, dual action, more fake Prog moves with a vocal flourish… like the other breaks on the LP gears continually shift right on time taking you through varying scenery quickly. The way the leads spitfire out at your face makes you think Jimmy Page might have been in the room!
Words by Paul Major
Stream the single “Face The Crowd” through the YouTube player below:
Purchase and Stream the album here: https://ridingeasy.ffm.to/demian
Tracklist:
01. Face The Crowd 02:58
02. Windy City 05:21
03. Love People 02:20
04. Coming 05:34
05. Todd’s Tune 03:21
06. No More Tenderness 03:53
07. Are You With Me Baby 04:55
08. Only A Loner 04:37